Now that your main pages are up, it is really a matter of populating them with content, based on what you want each page to help you do with your students. Let's go back to the planning tip from page 3 - Once the Wiki is Up.
Let's say you have:
One page as a welcome
One page as the final project or goal
One page with information - (these could be the page you include your explanations of the content, the main links, the key sources you want your students to refer to)
One page for individual practice and self-assessment
One page where students collaborate (or more than one if you want them to be an active part of the wiki environments)
One page for final projects to showcase
Begin with the simpler page - the Welcome Page. This is where you give an introduction to your students to the content of the wiki. Maybe you want your students to have a sense of what the wiki is about and for.
Write content in your page as you would on a word document. here a few basics about titles and formatting:
Edit Your Pages
Now that your main pages are up, it is really a matter of populating them with content, based on what you want each page to help you do with your students.
Let's go back to the planning tip from page 3 - Once the Wiki is Up.
Let's say you have:
Begin with the simpler page - the Welcome Page. This is where you give an introduction to your students to the content of the wiki. Maybe you want your students to have a sense of what the wiki is about and for.
Write content in your page as you would on a word document. here a few basics about titles and formatting:
Add New Pages and Titles to your Pages
Format Your Text